International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926
April 20, 1911 · Page 4 of 10
OCR Text
INTERK ONAL FALLS PRESS. EVER ON Th^ MOVE WAS OBEYING ORDERS Steam Heated Rooms. Perfect Service For making quickjy and perfectly, MODERN GREEKS PA88I0N HAVE The Aldine Cafe HUM0R0U8 INCIDENT IN NEW FOR WANDER! 10. delicious hot biscuits, »L- YORK STREET OAR. '.E, NEFFEW, A. Propi hot breads, cake and pastry Located in the new^lj^bis Block is now open both-iDAY and NIGHT Cafe Is 8oeial Center cfTown—Little TWInkllng»Byed Old Irishwoman Got and we are prepared to cater to the moi^lastidious. there is no substitute for Comfort In the Home#—Sisters Her Transfer Regardless of the Dr.PRICFS Must Marry Before Tho.lp WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF SUNDAY Dl&iJRS at 35 cents Qompany's Rule*—What the per plate. Regular meals 35 cents and up. »Wften you are in Do* Brothers Wanted It For. International Falls give us a trial. Hj^Eg&tisfied, .tell us—if satisfied, tell others^ To the Greeks, if we are to believe When the street railway companies Commutation Tickets. Rates to Steady Boarders Ducke Ferrlman, the art of making a In New York posted notices that passengers Wl 11 11 home Is not known, which does not BMMG POWDER desiring transfers must ask necessarily mean that the men of Hellas for them at the time of paying fare or lack the notion of "home" or di&like CREAM otherwise forfeit right to reoelve them,, it. l*hey understand home life of course people constantly forgot Ifee otherwise than we do, that Is alL SlVfORE troubles of the street ear employes "One may meet with exquisite were materially Increased thereby^— ZENJ D.^_. cleanliness," Mr. Ferriman states, r* 1WT except in occasional instances. The L/ "with beautifully embroidered bed conductor on an Amsterdam avenue linen scented with rosemary, but never oar was one day accosted by & quaint Domestic Sixty Years the Standard with .what we mean by coziness. The little twinkling-eyed old woman, who Greeks are far lessin their houses demanded her "thransfer." I KIiivTIN A nrn Made from pure Grape than we are, and when they are at "You should have asked me when home they appear to spend most fif you paid," he objected. Cream of Tartar their time in looking out of the window. "Sure, but I thried to do. ut,.me Havana They are not given to inviting bhoy," she said, her innate .•friendliness their friends to their houses. It is overflowing in a smile, "but ye AT DEALERS not that they are niggardly, for they No Alum—No Lime Phosphates wuz that quick 'a' loively ye'd will gladly entertain you at a restaurant sthepped off befure cud say a I at far greater cost to themselves. wurrudl" But it does not enter into their ideas The oonductors evidently reserved "I am entirely opposed to the use ol alum In to ask you home to dinner, even after the right to make exceptions. This Baking Powders***—Prof. Chandler, Columbia Univ. Licensed Plumbers and an acquaintance of many years. uno was a Koou-uitiuretl looking ytfufig "They do not ask each other, so it man indeed, by this time every one can hardly be expected that they about had begun to look good-natured. Read the Label «r.- Heating Engineers should make an exoeption in the case "All right, grandma," he said, jovially, of foreigners. The cafe is a second "I'll give you one this time. What "Alum, sodium alum, basic aluminum sulphate* home to them. There they meet other line do you want?" sulphate of aluminum, all mean the same thing friends and gossip. That is one reason, "Whut line?" she repeated doubtfully. namely* BURNT ALUM."—Kansas State Board of Health. WATER AND SEWER WORK PROMPTLY DONE. perhaps, why they dislike eountryjife.', "I don't wan anny other line." 'Don't you know where you want! to ESTIMATES FURNISHED ON SHORT NOTICE. "It offers no alternative to the home, go?" E A S O I N there the hearth is the social center, "Don't I know? Well, listen to the 6t while in town-it is the cafe. In Athena impidince of the bhoy, will ye!" those who do not own the house "You see," explained the 'bhoy,' OVESON BLOCK Intrnational Falls, Minn. PHONE 157 they dwell In seldom remain long In laughing, "if you tell me where you the same abode. Two or three years want to go, I know what transfer to J. CARTER & SON Is quite a long tenure. Many people give you." make a point of moving every year. "Well, if ye must know, I'm goin' "The imposing facades of Athenian to git off at Wan Hundred 'n' Sivlnth FORT FRANCES, ONT. houses conceal for the most part a Bthreet and go sthraight to me home, International Falls Abstract Co. bare and oomfortless interior, and a wan block wist." well kept garden is rare. A "Well, then, what do you want with garden is hot made In a year, "and: a Tlillinery at Canadian Prices transfer?" BURDICK, KREMER & KING, Proprietors person who changes his residence "Whut do I? 'Tis me own business every twelve months does not want that! Sure"—taking him fully into her ABSTRACTS. REAL ESTATE,{&:INSURANCE to be troubled with much furniture confidence—I'll be givin' it, mebby, to Latest Styles—Latest Trimming nor is he particular as to its arrangement, me little grandson. Whin I git home, Collections, Conveyancing Loans seeing that it will be carted he'll be askin' whut. grandma's got for away in a few months. him, the lamb!" E. "Home life has no resources for the J. BURDICK, Manage^ "But—" MISS J. SWEET, Head, Trimmer and Manager Greeks as it has for us. It affords "Now see here, wanst me bhoy, MINNESOTA INTERNATIONAL FALLS, them little occupation and no amusement. Danny, that's me son^he tould me pertickler They like to eat and drink .in to ask fer me thransfer whin Take the Ferry crowds,'where there is noise and movement. payin' me fare. 'Tis the comp'ny's Their instincts are too ordhes,' says he. An' that's whut I'm gregarious to allow them to appreciate doin'—askin' fer me thransfer. Ye've the domestic intimacy which we prize. been givin' ivery'wan else a thransfer, "The day chosen for marriage In an' ye can hand jme out mine widout so A. Setterlund & Co. pOOOOOOOOOOOOOpOOOOOOOOOCOOOOCOQ Greece is usually Sunday, but tile day manny wurruds/' of all days In the year is the Sunday The conductor surrendered. He selected Begin Today With $1 preceding the Christmas fast. It is not a red paipr, remarking, "That fashionable now to be married In rCglor will, please the little grandson* I guess!"/ Then he wenton, made hap* church, in Athens the ceremony General Contracprs pier for the rest of the day.—Youth's takes place in the house of tie bride's parents. A temporary altar is set up Companion. in the middle of the room. "At the conclusion of the ceremony Internationa Falls, Minnesota. Raising Their Oheok. the priest and the couple join hands "How is this for side?" said the and walk three times around the altar, photographer. "The other day I went the guests pelting them with comfits. into a crbwded restaurant to take a The most important part of the ceremony THE Public Schools will educate Your noonday picture. While I was focusing is the crowning of the bride and the camera the leader of a party bridegroom with wreaths of orange Boy—but his education .is not complete Special Invitation of men who had been sitting at a blossoms. Hence a wedding is popularly without a fair knowledge of business. called 'the crowning.' table thiat would-show up plainest in the photograph asked the* proprietor to "Love marriages are rare exceptions. He can soon grasp the principles to attend the Services at the make out a ten-dollar check In big The match is made by the parents of ordinary business transactions by* and relatives rather than by the figures. He did 'so. Their own check M. E. Church, Sunday Apr. 20 parties principally concerned. of $4.65 for the bunch was hidden having an account with a bank. You under a plate and the $10 check was There are certain established usages laid down, printed side up, for photographic can do your boy no greater service than which though- not legally binding fare Subject for Sermon in the morning purposes only.^ not to be contravened with impunity. "Co-^Wprkers" in encouraging-hinTto have a bank account "If the proprietor had not assured "Then it is considered wrong for me to the contrary'l should have set brothers to marry until their sisters with THIS bank. We say THIS Subject for sermoft. in the evening have been wed. Again girls must marry that down as the most flagrant instance 'II1 ustrateckPersitence'' bank, because his business will be welcome of snobbery, on record. He. declared in order of seniority. It would not be right for a girl to be married while that everyone the interior of here and his affairs will have our she had an elder sister who remained a restaurant is 'photographed some ^|C^IAPPELL Pastor careful and considerate attention at all patron whose amjbitioh is bigger than single. The men of a family are thus naturally anxious to see their sisters his pocketbook asks for a check big times. enough to cover his eating expenses settled, and as a dowry is Indispensable for-a week. its provision is often a matter of serious anxiety and the fruit of great self-denial on the part of the brothers Contractor Lattice for Inns. 8oreens if the parents are dead. and Builder Many quainti old inns .are: to be sewi "There are cases in which brothers in King's Lynn and the sign of the FIRST NATIONAL BANK have remained unmarried for years Lattice Inn is .one of the oW««t in and have devoted all their hard earned of Cement Sidewalks, Combined Curb and Gutters, Street existence. In tie plden times the-windows savings to the dowries of their sisters. of inns wenelkept ope^^sjd in Crossings, Driveways and Carriage Blocks. Estimates cheerfully Among the poorer classes emigration order to hide the revelers within a is resorted to not infrequently solely given. Write to lattioe pointed red, was pifte* with this object and many a dowry screen^! in the window. There,is an :old W E E W E S E comes to a Greek maiden from across JOB WORK AT THE PRESS OFFICE tag "As weUj toQwn by my wlt:as an the Atlantio."— London Dally Mail. alehouse by ft r#d lattice.' The lattices Aspelin, Minn. contlnued up to the beginning or the eighteenth ^century,, and wliett th#y figoiu, tli© windows th^y were adopted^as signs. The latter .aye getting scarce, and it is Ques very tionable whether half ft dozen oould be found in this ^imfry.-qyoMng, The Celebrated Val Blatz His Waste ef the Wfwfc Everyone Who wants a cfcpaiijMtflvi GUARANTEE OF QUALITY AND PURITY toroe has tried to hamee*t Bveiy ohild hss made pa©** WPW*1|§& MILWAUKEE BEERjSW or a. windmill. But esa-1| fctjflild that th« posslbto uses of ttifc- "wind WHOLESALE AND BE%AIL Copenhagen Snuft is made of the best, old, rich, highflavored hftve been arduously. inveftigMed as suoh recenUy discoreted torpm ss leaf tobacco, to which is added only such ingredients steem and eleotrteity, and gases? Is It OLD CROW Jtot conceivable ^at the ^raottoalpiei of the wtng^ .underesttmpls4 iaet as are component parts of natural leaf tobacco bfoause they are so familiar? We oftnnot help thtitfrtilg t^^ the SEAL OF INTERNATIONAL and absolutely pure flavoring extracts. The Snuff Process will be more *V some day in the saufie tMs^Bf®bft ibfe the problem oi retains the good the tobacco and expels the trlbution thf, the tides will be JSyiwM bitter and aicidiif fiktutal leaf tobacco. Ithtok thmt the wtoA oouM ,nf eleetrio. lightings yetthsMl^ao^o. 5^,,* ik -t?' wind, is tftrisWe International Phone 47 absent but' •».. eleotilo«jr AMERICAN SNUFF COMPANY, 111" FifthAvenue, New Yorlcf N. Y. ,on«. mli?*' wasl the very oftSft ltr did not